Michael Faraday thought that space is not empty, but connected
by a line of forces.

Charles Augustine de Coulomb discovered that two like-charged
matters could pull or push each other without being connected,
depending on their polarity in space.

Hans Christian Oersted found that a current-carrying wire
created magnetic fields that influenced the orientation of
nearby compass needles (picture below). Furthermore, he discovered
that an equation of gravitational force established by Isaac
Newton could also be used for electric forces.

Every experiment describing “empty” space suggests
that it contains invisible pulling or pushing forces, which
connect various entities to each other. We can conclude that
this connecting matter is not static, as it causes magnetic
needles to rotate. It transfers energy by existing paths in
space or perhaps it creates them.

In wave theory, I attempt to prove that these invisible forces
are energetic (electro-magnetic) matter, and that space and
the universe are composed of this matter. It appears everywhere
in space, and creates the primary formations, which were given
the name “quarks” by Gell-Mann Murray (picture
below).

In bubble chamber experiments, we see spiral formations when
particles are destroyed by collision. These formations may
be quarks, because basic energetic matter cannot exist by
itself for more than a brief time and must form a stable wave
formation. All waves are composed of two loops to give them
stability.